Physically Crosslinked “All Nucleic” Biomass DNA Hydrogel for Controlled Drug Delivery

03 November 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Naturally occurring liquid-liquid phase separation resulting in biomolecular condensates has inspired the formation of biomolecule based smart materials with multi-dimensional applications. Herein, we report a unique, simple and one step method for the bio-condensation of biomass DNA via non-electrostatic interactions leading to an “all nucleic” hydrogel with excellent mechanical properties. The DNA strands crosslinked with guanosine monophosphate molecules through physical interactions to form helical G-quartet superstructures. The hydrogel shows an efficient encapsulation and sustained release for both hydrophilic and hydrophobic drugs demonstrating the competency as a drug carrier. We believe that this energy efficient and low-cost method represents a new technique for the use of biomass DNA as building blocks for next generation of soft materials.

Keywords

all nucleic
biomass DNA
G-quartet
biomolecular condensate
drug delivery

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
Physically Crosslinked “All Nucleic” Biomass DNA Hydrogel for Controlled Drug Delivery
Description
Materials and methods, Scope for gel formation at different concentration, pH, shapes, Microscopic analysis, Spectroscopic analysis, Organogel formation, Extended rheological analysis, Biocompatibility Assay, Drug encapsulation and release with mechanism and comparison table, NP and QD embedded hydrogel formation and characterization
Actions
Title
Magnetic DNA-GMP hydrogel
Description
Magnetic NP-embedded DNA-GMP hydrogel formation and magnetic behaviour
Actions

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